Ghosting on Halloween

I would first like to state that this project is best suited for those who can sit still for a long exposure. Let me share some of my more successful attempts at this strategy before going into the tutorial.

This image of the water spirit was my first attempt at "Ghosting" back in 2011. It took a couple tries, but luckily my parents were good sports.

On Valentine's Day this year, I drove down to Tombstone for an assignment and met some very agreeable patrons who willingly posed at the Birdcage Theater and Doc Holliday's Saloon.

I needed one more so I called a friend and put her in a costume that my brother altered for a previous event and took her out to the desert to pose as a frontier woman.

Just this morning I got the great idea to attempt "Ghosting" my kids in their costumes out on the road.

The technique is not too hard. Like I said though, it takes a model who can hold a pose for a few seconds.

These are suggested camera settings. Feel free to bracket them as you see fit. The lights can be moved around as well. This is just how I set them up this evening.

I set the shutter speed to 30 seconds with the aperture at f/8 and ISO100.

With the shutter being open that long, it is imperative to have a tripod so your background stays sharp.

The constant lights will be on the whole time aiding in the exposure of the image.

Now here is the trick for the treat.

Have your model pose at the desired distance from the camera. Press the shutter release button on your camera. If you have your strobe synced to your camera, that works great; if not, fire your manual strobe quickly after pressing the shutter release.

Count to 3

Have your model hastily move out of the frame until the shutter closes.